Does the borrowing of an author's idea rather than their story constitute plagiarism? Say for instance you read a book and you really like the idea the author came up with but you felt that the story the author told was terrible. You believe you could write a much better book. So you create your own story with your own characters, settings, etc. And it is all based loosely on the idea of the author you just read. Is that plagiarism?
Take for instance Harry Potter. Let's say you like the idea of the magical world Jk Rowling created. But you think you can do better. So you write a book like hers but with your own original ideas. Perhaps you acknowledge that Jk Rowling has heavily influenced your work. Is this alright?
It all depends on how much and how closely it is copied. Most will not call Brooks' Shannara book (I cannot remember which, the first one, I suppose) plagiarism, but it leans very heavily on Tolkien. There is a Russian series which has been deemed as leaning too heavily on Harry Potter, however. I cannot remember the name. Here is a link.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
What exactly is plagiarism?
13/07/2010 03:10:22 PM
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Re: What exactly is plagiarism?
13/07/2010 03:44:32 PM
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